Houston Chronicle

Former DiNardo deputy won’t face charges

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A Texas grand jury has declined to indict the onetime deputy to Cardinal Daniel DiNardo on charges he sexually assaulted a married woman in a case that raised questions about consent in the #MeToo era.

The Harris County District Attorney’s Office had presented the case against Monsignor Frank Rossi on Monday, more than a year after Laura Pontikes filed a criminal complaint with Houston police.

“A grand jury was presented all the evidence and determined that no criminal charges are warranted,” said Dane Schiller, spokesman for the Harris County

District Attorney’s Office. “If new evidence is discovered at a later date, prosecutor­s have the option of presenting that evidence to another grand jury for considerat­ion.”

Rossi was for years the vicar-general to DiNardo, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Galveston-Houston and president of the U.S. bishops conference who has been leading the U.S. hierarchy’s response to the sexual abuse scandal.

The Associated Press in June reported that Pontikes, a Houston business executive, had alleged that Rossi manipulate­d her into a sexual relationsh­ip, all while acting as her spiritual adviser, hearing her confession­s, soliciting six-figure donations and counseling her husband on their troubled marriage.

The archdioces­e said at the time that Rossi’s relationsh­ip with Pontikes was inappropri­ate but consensual.

Under Texas law, it’s not a consensual relationsh­ip if a clergyman exploits the victim’s emotional dependency on him as a spiritual adviser.

Pontikes’ attorney didn’t immediatel­y return calls Monday seeking comment.

Dan Cogdell, the attorney for Rossi, said he was pleased for Rossi “and for those legions of people that supported him that the inquiry is over and he can get on with his life.”

“There was never a crime,” Cogdell said. “I’m glad the right thing happened for a person who I believe to be a terrific person.”

The AP doesn’t usually identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault. Pontikes came forward publicly and provided AP with years of emails with Rossi in which she lamented her emotional dependency on him, and Rossi assured her that God had brought them together and that their “holy touches” were sanctioned.

The archdioces­e of Galveston-Houston had defended DiNardo’s handling of the case and decision to let Rossi transfer to another diocese, in Beaumont, Texas, after undergoing counseling.

The diocese of Beaumont placed Rossi on temporary administra­tive leave in June pending the outcome of the police investigat­ion.

Neither the GalvestonH­ouston nor the Beaumont diocese responded to questions Monday about Rossi’s future status.

Texas is one of 13 U.S. states that criminaliz­es sex between clergy and parishione­rs, and researcher­s have published a wealth of academic literature on why such relationsh­ips aren’t necessaril­y consensual. Criminal indictment­s, however, are rare.

David Pooler, associate professor of social work at Baylor University in Waco, who has studied clergy sexual abuse of adults, said he considered Pontikes’ case a “slam dunk” instance of nonconsent.

He questioned whether the prosecutor was unpersuasi­ve, whether the defense was spectacula­r, or whether the jury didn’t understand “that what happened was abuse and (was) not able to name it as abuse.”

“I think it is a sad day because if what happened there didn’t bring an indictment, I don’t know what would,” Pooler said in an email.

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